If Hillary Clinton is elected to the presidency, some believe U.S. relations with Russia will be heading towards a low point not seen since the Cold War.

Clinton has publicly accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of interfering with the election, bombing children and civilians in Syria, invading Ukraine and undermining NATO at every step of his tenure.

Putin, in discussing the issue with journalists ruminated “Would Mrs. Clinton deliver on the threats and harsh rhetoric against Russia if she became President? Or will she correct her position against us?”

They recently unveiled a picture of their latest missile. Dubbed “Satan 2” by NATO, it’s the RS-28 Sarmat missile.

The pictures were displayed online publicly by the designers of the missile, the Makeyev Rocket Design Bureau.

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It flies at a top speed of 4.3 miles per second and has been designed to bypass anti-missile shields with its unpredictable flight path.

The RS-28 is also capable of evading detection by radar.

Capable of carrying 16 warheads comprising a 40 megaton payload. This payload is 2,000 times more powerful than the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. It could destroy an area the size of Texas.

With a range of 6,213 miles, the RS-28 is within range of major east and west coast cities in the United States.

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The pictures of the new RS-28 missile come on the heels of a major test of Russia’s national emergency response system.

Earlier in October, the Russians ran a series of emergency drills that lasted over the course of four days. 40 million civilians and 200,000 first responders participated. The drills were the largest since the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, and 1990 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, weighed in last week on the crisis and said in an interview, “I think the world has approached a dangerous threshold. We need to stop. Dialogue should be resumed. Stopping the dialogue has been the biggest mistake.”

Speaking to Bill O’Reilly back in April, Trump had this to say when asked if he’d have good relations with Putin: “Maybe we will, maybe we won’t. If we can make a great deal for our country and get along with Russia, that would be a tremendous thing. I would love to try it.”